Little Novels, by Wilkie Collins

Mr. Percy and the Prophet.

PART 1. — THE PREDICTION.

CHAPTER I.

THE QUACK.

THE disasters that follow the hateful offense against Christianity, which men call war, were
severely felt in England during the peace that ensued on the overthrow of Napoleon at Waterloo. With rare exceptions,
distress prevailed among all classes of the community. The starving nation was ripe and ready for a revolutionary
rising against its rulers, who had shed the people’s blood and wasted the people’s substance in a war which had yielded
to the popular interests absolutely nothing in return.

Among the unfortunate persons who were driven, during the disastrous early years of this century, to strange shifts
and devices to obtain the means of living, was a certain obscure medical man, of French extraction, named Lagarde. The
Doctor (duly qualified to bear the title) was an inhabitant of London; living in one of the narrow streets which
connect the great thoroughfare of the Strand with the bank of the Thames.

The method of obtaining employment chosen by poor Lagarde, as the one alternative left in the face of starvation,
was, and is still considered by the medical profession to be, the method of a quack. He advertised in the public
journals.

Addressing himself especially to two classes of the community, the Doctor proceeded in these words:

“I have the honor of inviting to my house, in the first place: Persons afflicted with maladies which ordinary
medical practice has failed to cure — and, in the second place: Persons interested in investigations, the object of
which is to penetrate the secrets of the future. Of the means by which I endeavor to alleviate suffering and to
enlighten doubt, it is impossible to speak intelligibly within the limits of an advertisement. I can only offer to
submit my system to public inquiry, without exacting any preliminary fee from ladies and gentlemen who may honor me
with a visit. Those who see sufficient reason to trust me, after personal experience, will find a money-box fixed on
the waiting-room table, into which they can drop their offerings according to their means. Those whom I am not
fortunate enough to satisfy will be pleased to accept the expression of my regret, and will not be expected to give
anything. I shall be found at home every evening between the hours of six and ten.”

Toward the close of the year 1816 this strange advertisement became a general topic of conversation among educated
people in London. For some weeks the Doctor’s invitations were generally accepted — and, all things considered, were
not badly remunerated. A faithful few believed in him, and told wonderful stories of what he had pronounced and
prophesied in the sanctuary of his consulting-room. The majority of his visitors simply viewed him in the light of a
public amusement, and wondered why such a gentlemanlike man should have chosen to gain his living by exhibiting himself
as a quack.

CHAPTER II.

THE NUMBERS.

ON a raw and snowy evening toward the latter part of January, 1817, a gentleman, walking along the Strand, turned
into the street in which Doctor Lagarde lived, and knocked at the physician’s door.

He was admitted by an elderly male servant to a waiting-room on the first floor. The light of one little lamp,
placed on a bracket fixed to the wall, was so obscured by a dark green shade as to make it difficult, if not
impossible, for visitors meeting by accident to recognize each other. The metal money-box fixed to the table was just
visible. In the flickering light of a small fire, the stranger perceived the figures of three men seated, apart and
silent, who were the only occupants of the room beside himself.

So far as objects were to be seen, there was nothing to attract attention in the waiting-room. The furniture was
plain and neat, and nothing more. The elderly servant handed a card, with a number inscribed on it, to the new visitor,
said in a whisper, “Your number will be called, sir, in your turn,” and disappeared. For some minutes nothing disturbed
the deep silence but the faint ticking of a clock. After a while a bell rang from an inner room, a door opened, and a
gentleman appeared, whose interview with Doctor Lagarde had terminated. His opinion of the sitting was openly expressed
in one emphatic word — “Humbug!” No contribution dropped from his hand as he passed the money-box on his way out.

The next number (being Number Fifteen) was called by the elderly servant, and the first incident occurred in the
strange series of events destined to happen in the Doctor’s house that night.

One after another the three men who had been waiting rose, examined their cards under the light of the lamp, and sat
down again surprised and disappointed.

The servant advanced to investigate the matter. The numbers possessed by the three visitors, instead of being
Fifteen, Sixteen and Seventeen, proved to be Sixteen, Seventeen and Eighteen. Turning to the stranger who had arrived
the last, the servant said:

“Have I made a mistake, sir? Have I given you Number Fifteen instead of Number Eighteen?”

The gentleman produced his numbered card.

A mistake had certainly been made, but not the mistake that the servant supposed. The card held by the latest
visitor turned out to be the card previously held by the dissatisfied stranger who had just left the room — Number
Fourteen! As to the card numbered Fifteen, it was only discovered the next morning lying in a corner, dropped on the
floor!

Acting on his first impulse, the servant hurried out, calling to the original holder of Fourteen to come back and
bear his testimony to that fact. The street-door had been opened for him by the landlady of the house. She was a pretty
woman — and the gentleman had fortunately lingered to talk to her. He was induced, at the intercession of the landlady,
to ascend the stairs again.

On returning to the waiting-room, he addressed a characteristic question to the assembled visitors. “More
humbug?” asked the gentleman who liked to talk to a pretty woman.

The servant — completely puzzled by his own stupidity — attempted to make his apologies.

“Pray forgive me, gentlemen,” he said. “I am afraid I have confused the cards I distribute with the cards returned
to me. I think I had better consult my master.”

Left by themselves, the visitors began to speak jestingly of the strange situation in which they were placed. The
original holder of Number Fourteen described his experience of the Doctor in his own pithy way. “I applied to the
fellow to tell my fortune. He first went to sleep over it, and then he said he could tell me nothing. I asked why. ‘I
don’t know,’ says he. ‘I do,’ says I— ‘humbug!’ I’ll bet you the long odds, gentlemen, that you find
it humbug, too.”

Before the wager could be accepted or declined, the door of the inner room was opened again. The tall, spare, black
figure of a new personage appeared on the threshold, relieved darkly against the light in the room behind him. He
addressed the visitors in these words:

“Gentlemen, I must beg your indulgence. The accident — as we now suppose it to be — which has given to the last
comer the number already held by a gentleman who has unsuccessfully consulted me, may have a meaning which we can none
of us at present see. If the three visitors who have been so good as to wait will allow the present holder of Number
Fourteen to consult me out of his turn — and if the earlier visitor who left me dissatisfied with his consultation will
consent to stay here a little longer — something may happen which will justify a trifling sacrifice of your own
convenience. Is ten minutes’ patience too much to ask of you?”

The three visitors who had waited longest consulted among themselves, and (having nothing better to do with their
time) decided on accepting the Doctor’s proposal. The visitor who believed it all to be “humbug” coolly took a gold
coin out of his pocket, tossed it into the air, caught it in his closed hand, and walked up to the shaded lamp on the
bracket.

“Heads, stay,” he said, “Tails, go.” He opened his hand, and looked at the coin. “Heads! Very good. Go on with your
hocus-pocus, Doctor — I’ll wait.”

“You believe in chance,” said the Doctor, quietly observing him. “That is not my experience of life.”

He paused to let the stranger who now held Number Fourteen pass him into the inner room — then followed, closing the
door behind him.

CHAPTER III.

THE CONSULTATION.

THE consulting-room was better lighted than the waiting-room, and that was the only difference between the two. In
the one, as in the other, no attempt was made to impress the imagination. Everywhere, the commonplace furniture of a
London lodging-house was left without the slightest effort to alter or improve it by changes of any kind.

Seen under the clearer light, Doctor Lagarde appeared to be the last person living who would consent to degrade
himself by an attempt at imposture of any kind. His eyes were the dreamy eyes of a visionary; his look was the
prematurely-aged look of a student, accustomed to give the hours to his book which ought to have been given to his bed.
To state it briefly, he was a man who might easily be deceived by others, but who was incapable of consciously
practicing deception himself.

Signing to his visitor to be seated, he took a chair on the opposite side of the small table that stood between them
— waited a moment with his face hidden in his hands, as if to collect himself — and then spoke.

“Do you come to consult me on a case of illness?” he inquired, “or do you ask me to look to the darkness which hides
your future life?”

The answer to these questions was frankly and briefly expressed. “I have no need to consult you about my health. I
come to hear what you can tell me of my future life.”

“I can try,” pursued the Doctor; “but I cannot promise to succeed.”

“I accept your conditions,” the stranger rejoined. “I never believe nor disbelieve. If you will excuse my speaking
frankly, I mean to observe you closely, and to decide for myself.”

Doctor Lagarde smiled sadly.

“You have heard of me as a charlatan who contrives to amuse a few idle people,” he said. “I don’t complain of that;
my present position leads necessarily to misinterpretation of myself and my motives. Still, I may at least say that I
am the victim of a sincere avowal of my belief in a great science. Yes! I repeat it, a great science! New, I dare say,
to the generation we live in, though it was known and practiced in the days when pyramids were built. The age is
advancing; and the truths which it is my misfortune to advocate, before the time is ripe for them, are steadily forcing
their way to recognition. I am resigned to wait. My sincerity in this matter has cost me the income that I derived from
my medical practice. Patients distrust me; doctors refuse to consult with me. I could starve if I had no one to think
of but myself. But I have another person to consider, who is very dear to me; and I am driven, literally driven, either
to turn beggar in the streets, or do what I am doing now.”

He paused, and looked round toward the corner of the room behind him. “Mother,” he said gently, “are you ready?”

An elderly lady, dressed in deep mourning, rose from her seat in the corner. She had been, thus far, hidden from
notice by the high back of the easy-chair in which her son sat. Excepting some f olds of fine black lace, laid over her
white hair so as to form a head-dress at once simple and picturesque, there was nothing remarkable in her attire. The
visitor rose and bowed. She gravely returned his salute, and moved so as to place herself opposite to her son.

“May I ask what this lady is going to do?” said the stranger.

“To be of any use to you,” answered Doctor Lagarde, “I must be thrown into the magnetic trance. The person who has
the strongest influence over me is the person who will do it to-night.”

He turned to his mother. “When you like,” he said.

Bending over him, she took both the Doctor’s hands, and looked steadily into his eyes. No words passed between them;
nothing more took place. In a minute or two, his head was resting against the back of the chair, and his eyelids had
closed.

“Are you sleeping?” asked Madame Lagarde.

“I am sleeping,” he answered.

She laid his hands gently on the arms of the chair, and turned to address the visitor.

“Let the sleep gain on him for a minute or two more,” she said. “Then take one of his hands, and put to him what
questions you please.”

“Does he hear us now, madam?”

“You might fire off a pistol, sir, close to his ear, and he would not hear it. The vibration might disturb him; that
is all. Until you or I touch him, and so establish the nervous sympathy, he is as lost to all sense of our presence
here, as if he were dead.”

“Are you speaking of the thing called Animal Magnetism, madam?”

“Yes, sir.”

“And you believe in it, of course?”

“My son’s belief, sir, is my belief in this thing as in other things. I have heard what he has been saying to you.
It is for me that he sacrifices himself by holding these exhibitions; it is in my poor interests that his hardly-earned
money is made. I am in infirm health; and, remonstrate as I may, my son persists in providing for me, not the bare
comforts only, but even the luxuries of life. Whatever I may suffer, I have my compensation; I can still thank God for
giving me the greatest happiness that a woman can enjoy, the possession of a good son.”

She smiled fondly as she looked at the sleeping man. “Draw your chair nearer to him,” she resumed, “and take his
hand. You may speak freely in making your inquiries. Nothing that happens in this room goes out of it.”

With those words she returned to her place, in the corner behind her son’s chair.

The visitor took Doctor Lagarde’s hand. As they touched each other, he was conscious of a faintly-titillating
sensation in his own hand — a sensation which oddly reminded him of bygone experiments with an electrical machine, in
the days when he was a boy at school!

“I wish to question you about my future life,” he began. “How ought I to begin?”

The Doctor spoke his first words in the monotonous tones of a man talking in his sleep.

“Own your true motive before you begin,” he said. “Your interest in your future life is centered in a woman. You
wish to know if her heart will be yours in the time that is to come — and there your interest in your future life
ends.”

This startling proof of the sleeper’s capacity to look, by sympathy, into his mind, and to see there his most secret
thoughts, instead of convincing the stranger, excited his suspicions. “You have means of getting information,” he said,
“that I don’t understand.”

The Doctor smiled, as if the idea amused him.

Madame Lagarde rose from her seat and interposed.

“Hundreds of strangers come here to consult my son,” she said quietly. “If you believe that we know who those
strangers are, and that we have the means of inquiring into their private lives before they enter this room, you
believe in something much more incredible than the magnetic sleep!”

This was too manifestly true to be disputed. The visitor made his apologies.

“I should like to have some explanation,” he added. “The thing is so very extraordinary. How can I prevail
upon Doctor Lagarde to enlighten me?”

“He can only tell you what he sees,” Madame Lagarde answered; “ask him that, and you will get a direct reply. Say to
him: ‘Do you see the lady?’”

The stranger repeated the question. The reply followed at once, in these words:

“I see two figures standing side by side. One of them is your figure. The other is the figure of a lady. She only
appears dimly. I can discover nothing but that she is taller than women generally are, and that she is dressed in pale
blue.”

The man to whom he was speaking started at those last words. “Her favorite color!” he thought to himself —
forgetting that, while he held the Doctor’s hand, the Doctor could think with his mind.

“Yes,” added the sleeper quietly, “her favorite color, as you know. She fades and fades as I look at her,” he went
on. “She is gone. I only see you, under a new aspect. You have a pistol in your hand. Opposite to you, there
stands the figure of another man. He, too, has a pistol in his hand. Are you enemies? Are you meeting to fight a duel?
Is the lady the cause? I try, but I fail to see her.”

“Can you describe the man?”

“Not yet. So far, he is only a shadow in the form of a man.”

There was another interval. An appearance of disturbance showed itself on the sleeper’s face. Suddenly, he waved his
free hand in the direction of the waiting-room.

“Send for the visitors who are there,” he said. “They are all to come in. Each one of them is to take one of my
hands in turn — while you remain where you are, holding the other hand. Don’t let go of me, even for a moment. My
mother will ring.”

Madame Lagarde touched a bell on the table. The servant received his orders from her and retired. After a short
absence, he appeared again in the consulting-room, with one visitor only waiting on the threshold behind him.

CHAPTER IV.

THE MAN.

“The other three gentlemen have gone away, madam,” the servant explained, addressing Madame Lagarde. “They were
tired of waiting. I found this gentleman fast asleep; and I am afraid he is angry with me for taking the
liberty of waking him.”

“Sleep of the common sort is evidently not allowed in this house.” With that remark the gentleman entered the room,
and stood revealed as the original owner of the card numbered Fourteen.

Viewed by the clear lamplight, he was a tall, finely-made man, in the prime of life, with a florid complexion,
golden-brown hair, and sparkling blue eyes. Noticing Madame Lagarde, he instantly checked the flow of his satire, with
the instinctive good-breeding of a gentleman. “I beg your pardon,” he said; “I have a great many faults, and a habit of
making bad jokes is one of them. Is the servant right, madam, in telling me that I have the honor of presenting myself
here at your request?”

Madame Lagarde briefly explained what had passed.

The florid gentleman (still privately believing it to be all “humbug”) was delighted to make himself of any use. “I
congratulate you, sir,” he said, with his easy humor, as he passed the visitor who had become possessed of his card.
“Number Fourteen seems to be a luckier number in your keeping than it was in mine.”

As he spoke, he took Doctor Lagarde’s disengaged hand. The instant they touched each other the sleeper started. His
voice rose; his face flushed. “You are the man!” he exclaimed. “I see you plainly now!”

“What am I doing?”

“You are standing opposite to the gentleman here who is holding my other hand; and (as I have said already) you have
met to fight a duel.”

The unbeliever cast a shrewd look at his companion in the consultation.

“Considering that you and I are total strangers, sir,” he said, “don’t you think the Doctor had better introduce us,
before he goes any further? We have got to fighting a duel already, and we may as well know who we are, before the
pistols go off.” He turned to Doctor Lagarde. “Dramatic situations don’t amuse me out of the theater,” he resumed. “Let
me put you to a very commonplace test. I want to be introduced to this gentleman. Has he told you his name?”

“No.”

“Of course, you know it, without being told?”

“Certainly. I have only to look into your own knowledge of yourselves, while I am in this trance, and while you have
got my hands, to know both your names as well as you do.”

“Mr. Percy Linwood,” replied the Doctor; “I have the honor of presenting you to Captain Bervie, of the
Artillery.”

With one accord, the gentlemen both dropped Doctor Lagarde’s hands, and looked at each other in blank amazement.

“Of course he has discovered our names somehow!” said Mr. Percy Linwood, explaining the mystery to his own perfect
satisfaction in that way.

Captain Bervie had not forgotten what Madame Lagarde had said to him, when he too had suspected a trick. He now
repeated it (quite ineffectually) for Mr. Linwood’s benefit. “If you don’t feel the force of that argument as I feel
it,” he added, “perhaps, as a favor to me, sir, you will not object to our each taking the Doctor’s hand again, and
hearing what more he can tell us while he remains in the state of trance?”

“With the greatest pleasure!” answered good-humored Mr. Linwood. “Our friend is beginning to amuse me; I am as
anxious as you are to know what he is going to see next.”

Captain Bervie put the next question.

“You have seen us ready to fight a duel — can you tell us the result?”

“I can tell you nothing more than I have told you already. The figures of the duelists have faded away, like the
other figures I saw before them. What I see now looks like the winding gravel-path of a garden. A man and a woman are
walking toward me. The man stops, and places a ring on the woman’s finger, and kisses her.”

Captain Bervie opened his lips to continue his inquiries — turned pale — and checked himself. Mr. Linwood put the
next question.

“Who is the happy man?” he asked.

“You are the happy man,” was the instantaneous reply.

“Who is the woman?” cried Captain Bervie, before Mr. Linwood could speak again.

“The same woman whom I saw before; dressed in the same color, in pale blue.”

Captain Bervie positively insisted on receiving clearer information than this. “Surely you can see
something of her personal appearance?” he said.

“I can see that she has long dark-brown hair, falling below her waist. I can see that she has lovely dark-brown
eyes. She has the look of a sensitive nervous person. She is quite young. I can see no more.”

“Look again at the man who is putting the ring on her finger,” said the Captain. “Are you sure that the face you see
is the face of Mr. Percy Linwood?”

“I am absolutely sure.”

Captain Bervie rose from his chair.

“Thank you, madam,” he said to the Doctor’s mother. “I have heard enough.”

He walked to the door. Mr. Percy Linwood dropped Doctor Lagarde’s hand, and appealed to the retiring Captain with a
broad stare of astonishment.

“You don’t really believe this?” he said.

“I only say I have heard enough,” Captain Bervie answered.

Mr. Linwood could hardly fail to see that any further attempt to treat the matter lightly might lead to undesirable
results.

“It is difficult to speak seriously of this kind of exhibition,” he resumed quietly. “But I suppose I may mention a
mere matter of fact, without meaning or giving offense. The description of the lady, I can positively declare, does not
apply in any single particular to any one whom I know.”

Captain Bervie turned round at the door. His patience was in some danger of failing him. Mr. Linwood’s unruffled
composure, assisted in its influence by the presence of Madame Lagarde, reminded him of the claims of politeness. He
restrained the rash words as they rose to his lips. “You may make new acquaintances, sir,” was all that he said.
“You have the future before you.”

Upon that, he went out. Percy Linwood waited a little, reflecting on the Captain’s conduct.

Had Doctor Lagarde’s description of the lady accidentally answered the description of a living lady whom Captain
Bervie knew? Was he by any chance in love with her? and had the Doctor innocently reminded him that his love was not
returned? Assuming this to be likely, was it really possible that he believed in prophetic revelations offered to him
under the fantastic influence of a trance? Could any man in the possession of his senses go to those lengths? The
Captain’s conduct was simply incomprehensible.

Pondering these questions, Percy decided on returning to his place by the Doctor’s chair. “Of one thing I am
certain, at any rate,” he thought to himself. “I’ll see the whole imposture out before I leave the house!”

He took Doctor Lagarde’s hand. “Now, then! what is the next discovery?” he asked.

The sleeper seemed to find some difficulty in answering the question.

“I indistinctly see the man and the woman again,” he said.

“Am I the man still?” Percy inquired.

“No. The man, this time, is the Captain. The woman is agitated by something that he is saying to her. He seems to be
trying to persuade her to go away with him. She hesitates. He whispers something in her ear. She yields. He leads her
away. The darkness gathers behind them. I look and look, and I can see no more.”

“Shall we wait awhile?” Percy suggested, “and then try again?”

Doctor Lagarde sighed, and reclined in his chair. “My head is heavy,” he said; “my spirits are dull. The darkness
baffles me. I have toiled long enough for you. Drop my hand and leave me to rest.”

Hearing those words, Madame Lagarde approached her son’s chair.

“It will be useless, sir, to ask him any more questions to-night,” she said. “He has been weak and nervous all day,
and he is worn out by the effort he has made. Pardon me, if I ask you to step aside for a moment, while I give him the
repose that he needs.”

She laid her right hand gently on the Doctor’s head, and kept it there for a minute or so. “Are you at rest now?”
she asked.

“I am at rest,” he answered, in faint, drowsy tones.

Madame Lagarde returned to Percy. “If you are not yet satisfied,” she said, “my son will be at your service
to-morrow evening, sir.”

“Thank you, madam, I have only one more question to ask, and you can no doubt answer it. When your son wakes, will
he remember what he has said to Captain Bervie and to myself?”

“My son will be as absolutely ignorant of everything that he has seen, and of everything that he has said in the
trance, as if he had been at the other end of the world.”

Percy Linwood swallowed this last outrageous assertion with an effort which he was quite unable to conceal. “Many
thanks, madam,” he said; “I wish you good-night.”

Returning to the waiting-room, he noticed the money-box fixed to the table. “These people look poor,” he thought to
himself, “and I feel really indebted to them for an amusing evening. Besides, I can afford to be liberal, for I shall
certainly never go back.” He dropped a five-pound note into the money-box, and left the house.

Walking toward his club, Percy’s natural serenity of mind was a little troubled by the remembrance of Captain
Bervie’s language and conduct. The Captain had interested the young man in spite of himself. His first idea was to
write to Bervie, and mention what had happened at the renewed consultation with Doctor Lagarde. On second thoughts, he
saw reason to doubt how the Captain might receive such an advance as this, on the part of a stranger. “After all,”
Percy decided, “the whole thing is too absurd to be worth thinking about seriously. Neither he nor I are likely to meet
again, or to see the Doctor again — and there’s an end of it.”

He never was more mistaken in his life. The end of it was not to come for many a long day yet.

PART II. — THE FULFILLMENT.

CHAPTER V.

THE BALLROOM.

WHILE the consultation at Doctor Lagarde’s was still fresh in the memory of the persons present at it, Chance or
Destiny, occupied in sowing the seeds for the harvest of the future, discovered as one of its fit instruments a retired
military officer named Major Mulvany.

The Major was a smart little man, who persisted in setting up the appearance of youth as a means of hiding the
reality of fifty. Being still a bachelor, and being always ready to make himself agreeable, he was generally popular in
the society of women. In the ballroom he was a really welcome addition to the company. The German waltz had then been
imported into England little more than three years since. The outcry raised against the dance, by persons ski lled in
the discovery of latent impropriety, had not yet lost its influence in certain quarters. Men who could waltz were
scarce. The Major had successfully grappled with the difficulties of learning the dance in mature life; and the young
ladies rewarded him nobly for the effort. That is to say, they took the assumption of youth for granted in the palpable
presence of fifty.

Knowing everybody and being welcome everywhere, playing a good hand at whist, and having an inexhaustible fancy in
the invention of a dinner, Major Mulvany naturally belonged to all the best clubs of his time. Percy Linwood and he
constantly met in the billiard-room or at the dinner-table. The Major approved of the easy, handsome, pleasant-tempered
young man. “I have lost the first freshness of youth,” he used to say, with pathetic resignation, “and I see myself
revived, as it were, in Percy. Naturally I like Percy.”

About three weeks after the memorable evening at Doctor Lagarde’s, the two friends encountered each other on the
steps of a club.

“Have you got anything to do to-night?” asked the Major.

“Nothing that I know of,” said Percy, “unless I go to the theater.”

“Let the theater wait, my boy. My old regiment gives a ball at Woolwich to-night. I have got a ticket to spare; and
I know several sweet girls who are going. Some of them waltz, Percy! Gather your rosebuds while you may. Come with
me.”

The invitation was accepted as readily as it was given. The Major found the carriage, and Percy paid for the
post-horses. They entered the ballroom among the earlier guests; and the first person whom they met, waiting near the
door, was — Captain Bervie.

Percy bowed a little uneasily. “I feel some doubt,” he said, laughing, “whether we have been properly introduced to
one another or not.”

Captain Bervie acknowledged the introduction by a cold salute. Percy, yielding to the good-natured impulse of the
moment, alluded to what had happened in Doctor Lagarde’s consulting-room.

“You missed something worth hearing when you left the Doctor the other night,” he said. “We continued the sitting;
and you turned up again among the persons of the drama, in a new character — ”

“Excuse me for interrupting you,” said Captain Bervie. “I am a member of the committee, charged with the
arrangements of the ball, and I must really attend to my duties.”

He withdrew without waiting for a reply. Percy looked round wonderingly at Major Mulvany. “Strange!” he said, “I
feel rather attracted toward Captain Bervie; and he seems to have taken such a dislike to me that he can hardly behave
with common civility. What does it mean?”

“I’ll tell you,” answered the Major, confidentially. “Arthur Bervie is madly in love — madly is really the word —
with a Miss Bowmore. And (this is between ourselves) the young lady doesn’t feel it quite in the same way. A sweet
girl; I’ve often had her on my knee when she was a child. Her father and mother are old friends of mine. She is coming
to the ball to-night. That’s the true reason why Arthur left you just now. Look at him — waiting to be the first to
speak to her. If he could have his way, he wouldn’t let another man come near the poor girl all through the evening; he
really persecutes her. I’ll introduce you to Miss Bowmore; and you will see how he looks at us for presuming to
approach her. It’s a great pity; she will never marry him. Arthur Bervie is a man in a thousand; but he’s fast becoming
a perfect bear under the strain on his temper. What’s the matter? You don’t seem to be listening to me.”

This last remark was perfectly justified. In telling the Captain’s love-story, Major Mulvany had revived his young
friend’s memory of the lady in the blue dress, who had haunted the visions of Doctor Lagarde.

“Tell me,” said Percy, “what is Miss Bowmore like? Is there anything remarkable in her personal appearance? I have a
reason for asking.”

As he spoke, there arose among the guests in the rapidly-filling ballroom a low murmur of surprise and admiration.
The Major laid one hand on Percy’s shoulder, and, lifting the other, pointed to the door.

“What is Miss Bowmore like?” he repeated. “There she is! Let her answer for herself.”

Percy turned toward the lower end of the room.

A young lady was entering, dressed in plain silk, and the color of it was a pale blue! Excepting a white rose at her
breast, she wore no ornament of any sort. Doubly distinguished by the perfect simplicity of her apparel, and by her
tall, supple, commanding figure, she took rank at once as the most remarkable woman in the room. Moving nearer to her
through the crowd, under the guidance of the complaisant Major, young Linwood gained a clearer view of her hair, her
complexion, and the color of her eyes. In every one of these particulars she was the living image of the woman
described by Doctor Lagarde!

While Percy was absorbed over this strange discovery, Major Mulvany had got within speaking distance of the young
lady and of her mother, as they stood together in conversation with Captain Bervie. “My dear Mrs. Bowmore, how well you
are looking! My dear Miss Charlotte, what a sensation you have made already! The glorious simplicity (if I may so
express myself) of your dress is — is — what was I going to say? — the ideas come thronging on me; I merely want
words.”

Miss Bowmore’s magnificent brown eyes, wandering from the Major to Percy, rested on the young man with a modest and
momentary interest, which Captain Bervie’s jealous attention instantly detected.

“They are forming a dance,” he said, pressing forward impatiently to claim his partner. “If we don’t take our places
we shall be too late.”

“Stop! stop!” cried the Major. “There is a time for everything, and this is the time for presenting my dear friend
here, Mr. Percy Linwood. He is like me, Miss Charlotte — he has been struck by your glorious simplicity, and
he wants words.” At this part of the presentation, he happened to look toward the irate Captain, and instantly
gave him a hint on the subject of his temper. “I say, Arthur Bervie! we are all good-humored people here. What have you
got on your eyebrows? It looks like a frown; and it doesn’t become you. Send for a skilled waiter, and have it brushed
off and taken away directly!”

“May I ask, Miss Bowmore, if you are disengaged for the next dance?” said Percy, the moment the Major gave him an
opportunity of speaking.

“Miss Bowmore is engaged to me for the next dance,” said the angry Captain, before the young lady could
answer.

“The third dance, then?” Percy persisted, with his brightest smile.

“With pleasure, Mr. Linwood,” said Miss Bowmore. She would have been no true woman if she had not resented the open
exhibition of Arthur’s jealousy; it was like asserting a right over her to which he had not the shadow of a claim. She
threw a look at Percy as her partner led her away, which was the severest punishment she could inflict on the man who
ardently loved her.

The third dance stood in the programme as a waltz.

In jealous distrust of Percy, the Captain took the conductor of the band aside, and used his authority as
committeeman to substitute another dance. He had no sooner turned his back on the orchestra than the wife of the
Colonel of the regiment, who had heard him, spoke to the conductor in her turn, and insisted on the original programme
being retained. “Quote the Colonel’s authority,” said the lady, “if Captain Bervie ventures to object.” In the
meantime, the Captain, on his way to rejoin Charlotte, was met by one of his brother officers, who summoned him
officially to an impending debate of the committee charged with the administrative arrangements of the supper-table.
Bervie had no choice but to follow his brother officer to the committee-room.

Barely a minute later the conductor appeared at his desk, and the first notes of the music rose low and plaintive,
introducing the third dance.

“Percy, my boy!” cried the Major, recognizing the melody, “you’re in luck’s way — it’s going to be a waltz!”

Almost as he spoke, the notes of the symphony glided by subtle modulations into the inspiriting air of the waltz.
Percy claimed his partner’s hand. Miss Charlotte hesitated, and looked at her mother.

“Surely you waltz?” said Percy.

“I have learned to waltz,” she answered, modestly; “but this is such a large room, and there are so many
people!”

“Once round,” Percy pleaded; “only once round!”

Miss Bowmore looked again at her mother. Her foot was keeping time with the music, under her dress; her heart was
beating with a delicious excitement; kind-hearted Mrs. Bowmore smiled and said: “Once round, my dear, as Mr. Linwood
suggests.”

In another moment Percy’s arm took possession of her waist, and they were away on the wings of the waltz!

Could words describe, could thought realize, the exquisite enjoyment of the dance? Enjoyment? It was more — it was
an epoch in Charlotte’s life — it was the first time she had waltzed with a man. What a difference between the fervent
clasp of Percy’s arm and the cold, formal contact of the mistress who had taught her! How brightly his eyes looked down
into hers; admiring her with such a tender restraint, that there could surely be no harm in looking up at him now and
then in return. Round and round they glided, absorbed in the music and in themselves. Occasionally her bosom just
touched him, at those critical moments when she was most in need of support. At other intervals, she almost let her
head sink on his shoulder in trying to hide from him the smile which acknowledged his admiration too boldly. “Once
round,” Percy had suggested; “once round,” her mother had said. They had been ten, twenty, thirty times round; they had
never stopped to rest like other dancers; they had centered the eyes of the whole room on them — including the eyes of
Captain Bervie — without knowing it; her delicately pale complexion had changed to rosy-red; the neat arrangement of
her hair had become disturbed; her bosom was rising and falling faster and faster in the effort to breathe — before
fatigue and heat overpowered her at last, and forced her to say to him faintly, “I’m very sorry — I can’t dance any
more!”

Percy led her into the cooler atmosphere of the refreshment-room, and revived her with a glass of lemonade. Her arm
still rested on his — she was just about to thank him for the care he had taken of her — when Captain Bervie entered
the room.

“Mrs. Bowmore wishes me to take you back to her,” he said to Charlotte. Then, turning to Percy, he added: “Will you
kindly wait here while I take Miss Bowmore to the ballroom? I have a word to say to you — I will return directly.”

The Captain spoke with perfect politeness — but his face betrayed him. It was pale with the sinister whiteness of
suppressed rage.

Percy sat down to cool and rest himself. With his experience of the ways of men, he felt no surprise at the marked
contrast between Captain Bervie’s face and Captain Bervie’s manner. “He has seen us waltzing, and he is coming back to
pick a quarrel with me.” Such was the interpretation which Mr. Linwood’s knowledge of the world placed on Captain
Bervie’s politeness. In a minute or two more the Captain returned to the refreshment-room, and satisfied Percy that his
anticipations had not deceived him.

CHAPTER VI.

LOVE.

FOUR days had passed since the night of the ball.

Although it was no later in the year than the month of February, the sun was shining brightly, and the air was as
soft as the air of a day in spring. Percy and Charlotte were walking together in the little garden at the back of Mr.
Bowmore’s cottage, near the town of Dartford, in Kent.

“Mr. Linwood,” said the young lady, “you were to have paid us your first visit the day after the ball. Why have you
kept us waiting? Have you been too busy to remember your new friends?”

“I have counted the hours since we parted, Miss Charlotte. If I had not been detained by business — ”

“I understand! For three days business has controlled you. On the fourth day, you have controlled business — and
here you are? I don’t believe one word of it, Mr. Linwood!”

There was no answering such a declaration as this. Guiltily conscious that Charlotte was right in refusing to accept
his well-worn excuse, Percy made an awkward attempt to change the topic of conversation.

They happened, at the moment, to be standing near a small conservatory at the end of the garden. The glass door was
closed, and the few plants and shrubs inside had a lonely, neglected look. “Does nobody ever visit this secluded
place?” Percy asked, jocosely, “or does it hide discoveries in the rearing of plants which are forbidden mysteries to a
stranger?”

“Satisfy your curiosity, Mr. Linwood, by all means,” Charlotte answered in the same tone. “Open the door, and I will
follow you.”

Percy obeyed. In passing through the doorway, he encountered the bare hanging branches of some creeping plant, long
since dead, and detached from its fastenings on the woodwork of the roof. He pushed aside the branches so that
Charlotte could easily follow him in, without being aware that his own forced passage through them had a little
deranged the folds of spotless white cambric which a well-dressed gentleman wore round his neck in those days.
Charlotte seated herself, and directed Percy’s attention to the desolate conservatory with a saucy smile.

“The mystery which your lively imagination has associated with this place,” she said, “means, being interpreted,
that we are too poor to keep a gardener. Make the best of your disappointment, Mr. Linwood, and sit here by me. We are
out of hearing and out of sight of mamma’s other visitors. You have no excuse now for not telling me what has really
kept you away from us.”

She fixed her eyes on him as she said those words. Before Percy could think of another excuse, her quick observation
detected the disordered condition of his cravat, and discovered the upper edge of a black plaster attached to one side
of his neck.

“You have been hurt in the neck!” she said. “That is why you have kept away from us for the last three days!”

Her eyes, still resting on his face, assumed an expression of suspicious inquiry, which Percy was entirely at a loss
to understand. Suddenly, she started to her feet, as if a new idea had occurred to her. “Wait here,” she said, flushing
with excitement, “till I come back: I insist on it!”

Before Percy could ask for an explanation she had left the conservatory.

In a minute or two, Miss Bowmore returned, with a newspaper in her hand. “Read that,” she said, pointing to a
paragraph distinguished by a line drawn round it in ink.

The passage that she indicated contained an account of a duel which had recently taken place in the neighborhood of
London. The names of the duelists were not mentioned. One was described as an officer, and the other as a civilian.
They had quarreled at cards, and had fought with pistols. The civilian had had a narrow escape of his life. His
antagonist’s bullet had passed near enough to the side of his neck to tear the flesh, and had missed the vital parts,
literally, by a hair’s-breadth.

Charlotte’s eyes, riveted on Percy, detected a sudden change of color in his face the moment he looked at the
newspaper. That was enough for her. “You are the man!” she cried. “Oh, for shame, for shame! To risk your life
for a paltry dispute about cards!”

“I would risk it again,” said Percy, “to hear you speak as if you set some value on it.”

She looked away from him without a word of reply. Her mind seemed to be busy again with its own thoughts. Did she
meditate returning to the subject of the duel? Was she not satisfied with the discovery which she had just made?

No such doubts as these troubled the mind of Percy Linwood. Intoxicated by the charm of her presence, emboldened by
her innocent betrayal of the interest that she felt in him, he opened his whole heart to her as unreservedly as if they
had known each other from the days of their childhood. There was but one excuse for him. Charlotte was his first
love.

“You don’t know how completely you have become a part of my life, since we met at the ball,” he went on. “That one
delightful dance seemed, by some magic which I can’t explain, to draw us together in a few minutes as if we had known
each other for years. Oh, dear! I could make such a confession of what I felt — only I am afraid of offending you by
speaking too soon. Women are so dreadfully difficult to understand. How is a man to know at what time it is considerate
toward them to conceal his true feelings; and at what time it is equally considerate to express his true feelings? One
doesn’t know whether it is a matter of days or weeks or months — there ought to be a law to settle it. Dear Miss
Charlotte, when a poor fellow loves you at first sight, as he has never loved any other woman, and when he is tormented
by the fear that some other man may be preferred to him, can’t you forgive him if he lets out the truth a little too
soon?” He ventured, as he put that very downright question, to take her hand. “It really isn’t my fault,” he said,
simply. “My heart is so full of you I can talk of nothing else.”

To Percy’s delight, the first experimental pressure of his hand, far from being resented, was softly returned.
Charlotte looked at him again, with a new resolution in her face.

“I’ll forgive you for talking nonsense, Mr. Linwood,” she said; “and I will even permit you to come and see me
again, on one condition — that you tell the whole truth about the duel. If you conceal the smallest circumstance, our
acquaintance is at an end.”

“Haven’t I owned everything already?” Percy inquired, in great perplexity. “Did I say No, when you told me I was the
man?”

“Could you say No, with that plaster on your neck?” was the ready rejoinder. “I am determined to know more than the
newspaper tells me. Will you declare, on your word of honor, that Captain Bervie had nothing to do with the duel? Can
you look me in the face, and say that the real cause of the quarrel was a disagreement at cards? When you were talking
with me just before I left the ball, how did you answer a gentleman who asked you to make one at the whist-table? You
said, ‘I don’t play at cards.’ Ah! You thought I had forgotten that? Don’t kiss my hand! Trust me with the whole truth,
or say good-by forever.”

“Only tell me what you wish to know, Miss Charlotte,” said Percy humbly. “If you will put the questions, I will give
the answers — as well as I can.”

On this understanding, Percy’s evidence was extracted from him as follows:

“Was it Captain Bervie who quarreled with you?”

“Yes.”

“Was it about me?”

“Yes.”

“What did he say?”

“He said I had committed an impropriety in waltzing with you.”

“Why?”

“Because your parents disapproved of your waltzing in a public ballroom.”

“That’s not true! What did he say next?”

“He said I had added tenfold to my offense, by waltzing with you in such a manner as to make you the subject of
remark to the whole room.”

“Oh! did you let him say that?”

“No; I contradicted him instantly. And I said, besides, ‘It’s an insult to Miss Bowmore, to suppose that she would
permit any impropriety.’”

“Quite right! And what did he say?”

“Well, he lost his temper; I would rather not repeat what he said when he was mad with jealousy. There was nothing
to be done with him but to give him his way.”

“Give him his way? Does that mean fight a duel with him?”

“Don’t be angry — it does.”

“And you kept my name out of it, by pretending to quarrel at the card-table?”

“Yes. We managed it when the cardroom was emptying at supper-time, and nobody was present but Major Mulvany and
another friend as witnesses.”

“And when did you fight the duel?”

“The next morning.”

“You never thought of me, I suppose?”

“Indeed, I did; I was very glad that you had no suspicion of what we were at.”

“Was that all?”

“No; I had your flower with me, the flower you gave me out of your nosegay, at the ball.”

“Well?”

“Oh, never mind, it doesn’t matter.”

“It does matter. What did you do with my flower?”

“I gave it a sly kiss while they were measuring the ground; and (don’t tell anybody!) I put it next to my heart to
bring me luck.”

“Was that just before he shot at you?”

“Yes.”

“How did he shoot?”

“He walked (as the seconds had arranged it) ten paces forward; and then he stopped, and lifted his pistol — ”

“Don’t tell me any more! Oh, to think of my being the miserable cause of such horrors! I’ll never dance again as
long as I live. Did you think he had killed you, when the bullet wounded your poor neck?”

“No; I hardly felt it at first.”

“Hardly felt it? How he talks! And when the wretch had done his best to kill you, and when it came to your turn,
what did you do?”

“Nothing.”

“What! You didn’t walk your ten paces forward?”

“No.”

“And you never shot at him in return?”

“No; I had no quarrel with him, poor fellow; I just stood where I was, and fired in the air — ”

Before he could stop her, Charlotte seized his hand, and kissed it with an hysterical fervor of admiration, which
completely deprived him of his presence of mind.

“Why shouldn’t I kiss the hand of a hero?” she cried, with tears of enthusiasm sparkling in her eyes. “Nobody but a
hero would have given that man his life; nobody but a hero would have pardoned him, while the blood was streaming from
the wound that he had inflicted. I respect you, I admire you. Oh, don’t think me bold! I can’t control myself when I
hear of anything noble and good. You will understand me better when we get to be old friends — won’t you?”

“Are we never to be nearer and dearer to each other than old friends?” he asked in a whisper. “I am not a hero —
your goodness overrates me, dear Miss Charlotte. My one ambition is to be the happy man who is worthy enough to win
you. At your own time! I wouldn’t distress you, I wouldn’t confuse you, I wouldn’t for the whole world take
advantage of the compliment which your sympathy has paid to me. If it offends you, I won’t even ask if I may hope.”

She sighed as he said the last words; trembled a little, and silently looked at him.

Percy read his answer in her eyes. Without meaning it on either side their heads drew nearer together; their cheeks,
then their lips, touched. She started back from him, and rose to leave the conservatory. At the same moment, the sound
of slowly-approaching footsteps became audible on the gravel walk of the garden. Charlotte hurried to the door.

“My father!” she exclaimed, turning to Percy. “Come, and be introduced to him.”

Percy followed her into the garden.

CHAPTER VII.

POLITICS.

JUDGING by appearances, Mr. Bowmore looked like a man prematurely wasted and worn by the cares of a troubled life.
His eyes presented the one feature in which his daughter resembled him. In shape and color they were exactly reproduced
in Charlotte; the difference was in the expression. The father’s look was habitually restless, eager, and suspicious.
Not a trace was to be seen in it of the truthfulness and gentleness which made the charm of the daughter’s expression.
A man whose bitter experience of the world had soured his temper and shaken his faith in his fellow-creatures — such
was Mr. Bowmore as he presented himself on the surface. He received Percy politely — but with a preoccupied air. Every
now and then, his restless eyes wandered from the visitor to an open letter in his hand. Charlotte, observing him,
pointed to the letter.

“Have you any bad news there, papa?” she asked.

“Dreadful news!” Mr. Bowmore answered. “Dreadful news, my child, to every Englishman who respects the liberties
which his ancestors won. My correspondent is a man who is in the confidence of the Ministers,” he continued, addressing
Percy. “What do you think is the remedy that the Government proposes for the universal distress among the population,
caused by an infamous and needless war? Despotism, Mr. Linwood; despotism in this free country is the remedy! In one
week more, sir, Ministers will bring in a Bill for suspending the Habeas Corpus Act!”

Before Percy could do justice in words to the impression produced on him, Charlotte innocently asked a question
which shocked her father.

“What is the Habeas Corpus Act, papa”’

“Good God!” cried Mr. Bowmore, “is it possible that a child of mine has grown up to womanhood, in ignorance of the
palladium of English liberty? Oh, Charlotte! Charlotte!”

“I am very sorry, papa. If you will only tell me, I will never forget it.”

Mr. Bowmore reverently uncovered his head, saluting an invisible Habeas Corpus Act. He took his daughter by the
hand, with a certain parental sternness: his voice trembled with emotion as he spoke his next words:

“The Habeas Corpus Act, my child, forbids the imprisonment of an English subject, unless that imprisonment can be
first justified by law. Not even the will of the reigning monarch can prevent us from appearing before the judges of
the land, and summoning them to declare whether our committal to prison is legally just.”

He put on his hat again. “Never forget what I have told you, Charlotte!” he said solemnly. “I would not remove my
hat, sir,” he continuing, turning to Percy, “in the presence of the proudest autocrat that ever sat on a throne. I
uncover, in homage to the grand law which asserts the sacredness of human liberty. When Parliament has sanctioned the
infamous Bill now before it, English patriots may be imprisoned, may even be hanged, on warrants privately obtained by
the paid spies and informers of the men who rule us. Perhaps I weary you, sir. You are a young man; the conduct of the
Ministry may not interest you.”

“On the contrary,” said Percy, “I have the strongest personal interest in the conduct of the Ministry.”

“How? in what way?” cried Mr. Bowmore eagerly.

“My late father had a claim on government,” Percy answered, “for money expended in foreign service. As his heir, I
inherit the claim, which has been formally recognized by the present Ministers. My petition for a settlement will be
presented by friends of mine who can advocate my interests in the House of Commons.”

Mr. Bowmore took Percy’s hand, and shook it warmly.

“In such a matter as this you cannot have too many friends to help you,” he said. “I myself have some influence, as
representing opinion outside the House; and I am entirely at your service. Come tomorrow, and let us talk over the
details of your claim at my humble dinner-table. To-day I must attend a meeting of the Branch–Hampden-Club, of which I
am vice-president, and to which I am now about to communicate the alarming news which my letter contains. Excuse me for
leaving you — and count on a hearty welcome when we see you to-morrow.”

The amiable patriot saluted his daughter with a smile, and disappeared.

“I hope you like my father?” said Charlotte. “All our friends say he ought to be in Parliament. He has tried twice.
The expenses were dreadful; and each time the other man defeated him. The agent says he would be certainly elected, if
he tried again; but there is no money, and we mustn’t think of it.”

A man of a suspicious turn of mind might have discovered, in those artless words, the secret of Mr. Bowmore’s
interest in the success of his young friend’s claim on the Government. One British subject, with a sum of ready money
at his command, may be an inestimably useful person to another British subject (without ready money) who cannot sit
comfortably unless he sits in Parliament. But honest Percy Linwood was not a man of a suspicious turn of mind. He had
just opened his lips to echo Charlotte’s filial glorification of her father, when a shabbily-dressed man-servant met
them with a message, for which they were both alike unprepared:

“Captain Bervie has called, Miss, to say good-by, and my mistress requests your company in the parlor.”

CHAPTER VIII.

THE WARNING.

HAVING delivered his little formula of words, the shabby servant cast a look of furtive curiosity at Percy and
withdrew. Charlotte turned to her lover, with indignation sparkling in her eyes and flushing on her cheeks at the bare
idea of seeing Captain Bervie again. “Does he think I will breathe the same air,” she exclaimed, “with the man who
attempted to take your life!”

Percy gently remonstrated with her.

“You are sadly mistaken,” he said. “Captain Bervie stood to receive my fire as fairly as I stood to receive his.
When I discharged my pistol in the air, he was the first man who ran up to me, and asked if I was seriously hurt. They
told him my wound was a trifle; and he fell on his knees and thanked God for preserving my life from his guilty hand.
‘I am no longer the rival who hates you,’ he said. ‘Give me time to try if change of scene will quiet my mind; and I
will be your brother, and her brother.’ Whatever his faults may be, Charlotte, Arthur Bervie has a
great heart. Go in, I entreat you, and be friends with him as I am.”

She secretly resented the comparison, and detested the Captain more heartily than ever. “I will go in and see him,
if you wish it,” she said. “But not by myself. I want you to come with me.”

“Why?” Percy asked.

“I want to see what his face says, when you and he meet.”

“Do you still doubt him, Charlotte?”

She made no reply. Percy had done his best to convince her, and had evidently failed.

They went together into the cottage. Fixing her eyes steadily on the Captain’s face, Charlotte saw it turn pale when
Percy followed her into the parlor. The two men greeted one another cordially. Charlotte sat down by her mother,
preserving her composure so far as appearances went. “I hear you have called to bid us good-by,” she said to Bervie.
“Is it to be a long absence?”

“I have got two months’ leave,” the Captain answered, without looking at her while he spoke.

“Are you going abroad?”

“Yes. I think so.”

She turned away to her mother. Bervie seized the opportunity of speaking to Percy. “I have a word of advice for your
private ear.” At the same moment, Charlotte whispered to her mother: “Don’t encourage him to prolong his visit.”

The Captain showed no intention to prolong his visit. To Charlotte’s surprise, when he took leave of the ladies,
Percy also rose to go. “His carriage,” he said, “was waiting at the door; and he had offered to take Captain Bervie
back to London.”

Charlotte instantly suspected an arrangement between the two men for a confidential interview. Her obstinate
distrust of Bervie strengthened tenfold. She reluctantly gave him her hand, as he parted from her at the parlor-door.
The effort of concealing her true feeling toward him gave a color and a vivacity to her face which made her
irresistibly beautiful. Bervie looked at the woman whom he had lost with an immeasurable sadness in his eyes. “When we
meet again,” he said, “you will see me in a new character.” He hurried out of the gate, as if he feared to trust
himself for a moment longer in her presence.

Charlotte followed Percy into the passage. “I shall be here to-morrow, dearest!” he said, and tried to raise her
hand to his lips. She abruptly drew it away. “Not that hand!” she answered. “Captain Bervie has just touched it. Kiss
the other!”

“Do you still doubt the Captain?” said Percy, amused by her petulance.

She put her arm over his shoulder, and touched the plaster on his neck gently with her finger. “There’s one thing I
don’t doubt,” she said: “the Captain did that!”

Percy left her, laughing. At the front gate of the cottage he found Arthur Bervie in conversation with the same
shabbily-dressed man-servant who had announced the Captain’s visit to Charlotte.

“What has become of the other servant?” Bervie asked. “I mean the old man who has been with Mr. Bowmore for so many
years.”

“He has left his situation, sir.”

“Why?”

“As I understand, sir, he spoke disrespectfully to the master.”

“Oh! And how came the master to hear of you?”

“I advertised; and Mr. Bowmore answered my advertisement.”

Bervie looked hard at the man for a moment, and then joined Percy at the carriage door. The two gentlemen started
for London.

“What do you think of Mr. Bowmore’s new servant?” asked the Captain as they drove away from the cottage. “I don’t
like the look of the fellow.”

“I didn’t particularly notice him,” Percy answered.

There was a pause. When the conversation was resumed, it turned on common-place subjects. The Captain looked
uneasily out of the carriage window. Percy looked uneasily at the Captain.

They had left Dartford about two miles behind them, when Percy noticed an old gabled house, sheltered by magnificent
trees, and standing on an eminence well removed from the high-road. Carriages and saddle-horses were visible on the
drive in front, and a flag was hoisted on a staff placed in the middle of the lawn.

“Something seems to be going on there,” Percy remarked. “A fine old house! Who does it belong to?”

Bervie smiled. “It belongs to my father,” he said. “He is chairman of the bench of local magistrates, and he
receives his brother justices to-day, to celebrate the opening of the sessions.”

He stopped and looked at Percy with some embarrassment. “I am afraid I have surprised and disappointed you,” he
resumed, abruptly changing the subject. “I told you when we met just now at Mr. Bowmore’s cottage that I had something
to say to you; and I have not yet said it. The truth is, I don’t feel sure whether I have been long enough your friend
to take the liberty of advising you.”

“You will probably pass much of your time at the cottage,” he began, “and you will be thrown a great deal into Mr.
Bowmore’s society. I have known him for many years. Speaking from that knowledge, I most seriously warn you against him
as a thoroughly unprincipled and thoroughly dangerous man.”

This was strong language — and, naturally enough, Percy said so. The Captain justified his language.

“Without alluding to Mr. Bowmore’s politics,” he went on, “I can tell you that the motive of everything he says and
does is vanity. To the gratification of that one passion he would sacrifice you or me, his wife or his daughter,
without hesitation and without remorse. His one desire is to get into Parliament. You are wealthy, and you can help
him. He will leave no effort untried to reach that end; and, if he gets you into political difficulties, he will desert
you without scruple.”

Percy made a last effort to take Mr. Bowmore’s part — for the one irresistible reason that he was Charlotte’s
father.

“Pray don’t think I am unworthy of your kind interest in my welfare,” he pleaded. “Can you tell me of any
facts which justify what you have just said?”

“I can tell you of three facts,” Bervie said. “Mr. Bowmore belongs to one of the most revolutionary clubs in
England; he has spoken in the ranks of sedition at public meetings; and his name is already in the black book at the
Home Office. So much for the past. As to the future, if the rumor be true that Ministers mean to stop the
insurrectionary risings among the population by suspending the Habeas Corpus Act, Mr. Bowmore will certainly be in
danger; and it may be my father’s duty to grant the warrant that apprehends him. Write to my father to verify what I
have said, and I will forward your letter by way of satisfying him that he can trust you. In the meantime, refuse to
accept Mr. Bowmore’s assistance in the matter of your claim on Parliament; and, above all things, stop him at the
outset, when he tries to steal his way into your intimacy. I need not caution you to say nothing against him to his
wife and daughter. His wily tongue has long since deluded them. Don’t let him delude you! Have you thought any
more of our evening at Doctor Lagarde’s?” he asked, abruptly changing the subject.

“I hardly know,” said Percy, still under the impression of the formidable warning which he had just received.

“Let me jog your memory,” the other continued. “You went on with the consultation by yourself, after I had left the
Doctor’s house. It will be really doing me a favor if you can call to mind what Lagarde saw in the trance — in my
absence?”

Thus entreated Percy roused himself. His memory of events were still fresh enough to answer the call that his friend
had made on it. In describing what had happened, he accurately repeated all that the Doctor had said.

Bervie dwelt on the words with alarm in his face as well as surprise.

“A man like me, trying to persuade a woman like — ” he checked himself, as if he was afraid to let Charlotte’s name
pass his lips. “Trying to induce a woman to go away with me,” he resumed, “and persuading her at last? Pray, go on!
What did the Doctor see next?”

“He was too much exhausted, he said, to see any more.”

“Surely you returned to consult him again?”

“No; I had had enough of it.”

“When we get to London,” said the Captain, “we shall pass along the Strand, on the way to your chambers. Will you
kindly drop me at the turning that leads to the Doctor’s lodgings?”

Percy looked at him in amazement. “You still take it seriously?” he said.

“Is it not serious?” Bervie asked. “Have you and I, so far, not done exactly what this man saw us doing?
Did we not meet, in the days when we were rivals (as he saw us meet), with the pistols in our hands? Did you not
recognize his description of the lady when you met her at the ball, as I recognized it before you?”

“Mere coincidences!” Percy answered, quoting Charlotte’s opinion when they had spoken together of Doctor Lagarde,
but taking care not to cite his authority. “How many thousand men have been crossed in love? How many thousand men have
fought duels for love? How many thousand women choose blue for their favorite color, and answer to the vague
description of the lady whom the Doctor pretended to see?”

“Say that it is so,” Bervie rejoined. “The thing is remarkable, even from your point of view. And if more
coincidences follow, the result will be more remarkable still.”

Arrived at the Strand, Percy set the Captain down at the turning which led to the Doctor’s lodgings. “You will call
on me or write me word, if anything remarkable happens?” he said.

“You shall hear from me without fail,” Bervie replied.

That night, the Captain’s pen performed the Captain’s promise, in few and startling words.

“Melancholy news! Madame Lagarde is dead. Nothing is known of her son but that he has left England. I have found out
that he is a political exile. If he has ventured back to France, it is barely possible that I may hear something of
him. I have friends at the English embassy in Paris who will help me to make inquiries; and I start for the Continent
in a day or two. Write to me while I am away, to the care of my father, at ‘The Manor House, near Dartford.’ He will
always know my address abroad, and will forward your letters. For your own sake, remember the warning I gave you this
afternoon! Your faithful friend, A. B.”

CHAPTER IX.

OFFICIAL SECRETS

THERE WAS a more serious reason than Bervie was aware of, at the time, for the warning which he had thought it his
duty to address to Percy Linwood. The new footman who had entered Mr. Bowmore’s service was a Spy.

Well practiced in the infamous vocation that he followed, the wretch had been chosen by the Department of Secret
Service at the Home Office, to watch the proceedings of Mr. Bowmore and his friends, and to report the result to his
superiors. It may not be amiss to add that the employment of paid spies and informers, by the English Government of
that time, was openly acknowledged in the House of Lords, and was defended as a necessary measure in the speeches of
Lord Redesdale and Lord Liverpool.1

The reports furnished by the Home Office Spy, under these circumstances, begin with the month of March, and take the
form of a series of notes introduced as follows:

“MR. SECRETARY— Since I entered Mr. Bowmore’s service, I have the honor to inform you that my eyes and ears have
been kept in a state of active observation; and I can further certify that my means of making myself useful in the
future to my honorable employers are in no respect diminished. Not the slightest suspicion of my true character is felt
by any person in the house.

FIRST NOTE.

“The young gentleman now on a visit to Mr. Bowmore is, as you have been correctly informed, Mr. Percy Linwood.
Although he is engaged to be married to Miss Bowmore, he is not discreet enough to conceal a certain want of friendly
feeling, on his part, toward her father. The young lady has noticed this, and has resented it. She accuses her lover of
having allowed himself to be prejudiced against Mr. Bowmore by some slanderous person unknown.

“Mr. Percy’s clumsy defense of himself led (in my hearing) to a quarrel! Nothing but his prompt submission prevented
the marriage engagement from being broken off.

“‘If you showed a want of confidence in Me’ (I heard Miss Charlotte say), ‘I might forgive it. But when you show a
want of confidence in a man so noble as my father, I have no mercy on you.’ After such an expression of filial
sentiment as this, Mr. Percy wisely took the readiest way of appealing to the lady’s indulgence. The young man has a
demand on Parliament for moneys due to his father’s estate; and he pleased and flattered Miss Charlotte by asking Mr.
Bowmore to advise him as to the best means of asserting his claim. By way of advancing his political interests, Mr.
Bowmore introduced him to the local Hampden Club; and Miss Charlotte rewarded him with a generosity which must not be
passed over in silence. Her lover was permitted to put an engagement ring on her finger, and to kiss her afterward to
his heart’s content.”

SECOND NOTE.

“Mr. Percy has paid more visits to the Republican Club; and Justice Bervie (father of the Captain) has heard of it,
and has written to his son. The result that might have been expected has followed. Captain Bervie announces his return
to England, to exert his influence for political good against the influence of Mr. Bowmore for political evil.

“In the meanwhile, Mr. Percy’s claim has been brought before the House of Commons, and has been adjourned for
further consideration in six months’ time. Both the gentlemen are indignant — especially Mr. Bowmore. He has called a
meeting of the Club to consider his young friend’s wrongs, and has proposed the election of Mr. Percy as a member of
that revolutionary society.”

THIRD NOTE.

“Mr. Percy has been elected. Captain Bervie has tried to awaken his mind to a sense of the danger that threatens
him, if he persists in associating with his republican friends — and has utterly failed. Mr. Bowmore and Mr. Percy have
made speeches at the Club, intended to force the latter gentleman’s claim on the immediate attention of Government. Mr.
Bowmore’s flow of frothy eloquence has its influence (as you know from our shorthand writers’ previous reports) on
thousands of ignorant people. As it seems to me, the reasons for at once putting this man in prison are beyond dispute.
Whether it is desirable to include Mr. Percy in the order of arrest, I must not venture to decide. Let me only hint
that his seditious speech rivals the more elaborate efforts of Mr. Bowmore himself.

“So much for the present. I may now respectfully direct your attention to the future.

“On the second of April next the Club assembles a public meeting, ‘in aid of British liberty,’ in a field near
Dartford. Mr. Bowmore is to preside, and is to be escorted afterward to Westminster Hall on his way to plead Mr.
Percy’s cause, in his own person, before the House of Commons. He is quite serious in declaring that ‘the minions of
Government dare not touch a hair of his head.’ Miss Charlotte agrees with her father And Mr. Percy agrees with Miss
Charlotte. Such is the state of affairs at the house in which I am acting the part of domestic servant.

“I inclose shorthand reports of the speeches recently delivered at the Hampden Club, and have the honor of waiting
for further orders.”

“He quite understood the necessity for keeping the arrest a strict secret, in the interests of Government. The only
reluctance he felt in granting the warrant related to his son’s intimate friend. But for the peremptory tone of your
letter, I really believe he would have asked you to give Mr. Percy time for consideration. Not being rash enough to
proceed to such an extreme as this, he slyly consulted the young man’s interests by declining, on formal grounds, to
date the warrant earlier than the second of April. Please note that my visit to him was paid at noon, on the
thirty-first of March.

“If the object of this delay (to which I was obliged to submit) is to offer a chance of escape to Mr. Percy, the
same chance necessarily includes Mr. Bowmore, whose name is also in the warrant. Trust me to keep a watchful eye on
both these gentlemen; especially on Mr. Bowmore. He is the most dangerous man of the two, and the most likely, if he
feels any suspicions, to slip through the fingers of the law.

“I have also to report that I discovered three persons in the hall of Justice Bervie’s house, as I went out.

“One of them was his son, the Captain; one was his daughter, Miss Bervie; and the third was that smooth-tongued old
soldier, Major Mulvany. If the escape of Mr. Bowmore and Mr. Linwood is in contemplation, mark my words: the persons
whom I have just mentioned will be concerned in it — and perhaps Miss Charlotte herself as well. At present, she is
entirely unsuspicious of any misfortune hanging over her head; her attention being absorbed in the preparation of her
bridal finery. As an admirer myself of the fair sex, I must own that it seems hard on the girl to have her lover
clapped into prison, before the wedding-day.

“I will bring you word of the arrest myself. There will be plenty of time to catch the afternoon coach to
London.

“Here — unless something happens which it is impossible to foresee — my report may come to an end.”

1 Readers who may desire to test the author’s authority for this
statement, are referred to “The Annual Register” for 1817, Chapters I. and III.; and, further on, to page 66 in the
same volume.

CHAPTER X.

THE ELOPEMENT.

ON the evening of the first of April, Mrs. Bowmore was left alone with the servants. Mr. Bowmore and Percy had gone
out together to attend a special meeting of the Club. Shortly afterward Miss Charlotte had left the cottage, under very
extraordinary circumstances.

A few minutes only after the departure of her father and Percy, she received a letter, which appeared to cause her
the most violent agitation. She said to Mrs. Bowmore:

“Mamma, I must see Captain Bervie for a few minutes in private, on a matter of serious importance to all of us. He
is waiting at the front gate, and he will come in if I show myself at the hall door.”

Upon this, Mrs. Bowmore had asked for an explanation.

“There is no time for explanation,” was the only answer she received; “I ask you to leave me for five minutes alone
with the Captain.”

Mrs. Bowmore still hesitated. Charlotte snatched up her garden hat, and declared, wildly, that she would go out to
Captain Bervie, if she was not permitted to receive him at home. In the face of this declaration, Mrs. Bowmore yielded,
and left the room.

In a minute more the Captain made his appearance.

Although she had given way, Mrs. Bowmore was not disposed to trust her daughter, without supervision, in the society
of a man whom Charlotte herself had reviled as a slanderer and a false friend. She took up her position in the veranda
outside the parlor, at a safe distance from one of the two windows of the room which had been left partially open to
admit the fresh air. Here she waited and listened.

The conversation was for some time carried on in whispers.

As they became more and more excited, both Charlotte and Bervie ended in unconsciously raising their voices.

“I swear it to you on my faith as a Christian!” Mrs. Bowmore heard the Captain say. “I declare before God who hears
me that I am speaking the truth!”

And Charlotte had answered, with a burst of tears:

“I can’t believe you! I daren’t believe you! Oh, how can you ask me to do such a thing? Let me go! let me go!”

Alarmed at those words, Mrs. Bowmore advanced to the window and looked in.

Bervie had put her daughter’s arm on his arm, and was trying to induce her to leave the parlor with him. She
resisted, and implored him to release her. He dropped her arm, and whispered in her ear. She looked at him — and
instantly made up her mind.

“Let me tell my mother where I am going,” she said; “and I will consent.”

“Be it so!” he answered. “And remember one thing: every minute is precious; the fewest words are the best.”

Mrs. Bowmore re-entered the cottage by the adjoining room, and met them in the passage. In few words, Charlotte
spoke.

“I must go at once to Justice Bervie’s house. Don’t be afraid, mamma! I know what I am about, and I know I am
right.”

“Going to Justice Bervie’s!” cried Mrs. Bowmore, in the utmost extremity of astonishment. “What will your father
say, what will Percy think, when they come back from the Club?”

“My sister’s carriage is waiting for me close by,” Bervie answered. “It is entirely at Miss Bowmore’s disposal. She
can easily get back, if she wishes to keep her visit a secret, before Mr. Bowmore and Mr. Linwood return.”

He led her to the door as he spoke. She ran back and kissed her mother tenderly. Mrs. Bowmore called to them to
wait.

“I daren’t let you go,” she said to her daughter, “without your father’s leave!”

Charlotte seemed not to hear, the Captain seemed not to hear. They ran across the front garden, and through the gate
— and were out of sight in less than a minute.

More than two hours passed; the sun sank below the horizon, and still there were no signs of Charlotte’s return.

Feeling seriously uneasy, Mrs. Bowmore crossed the room to ring the bell, and send the man-servant to Justice
Bervie’s house to hasten her daughter’s return.

As she approached the fireplace, she was startled by a sound of stealthy footsteps in the hall, followed by a loud
noise as of some heavy object that had dropped on the floor. She rang the bell violently, and opened the door of the
parlor. At the same moment, the spy-footman passed her, running out, apparently in pursuit of somebody, at the top of
his speed. She followed him, as rapidly as she could, across the little front garden, to the gate. Arrived in the road,
she was in time to see him vault upon the luggage-board at the back of a post-chaise before the cottage, just as the
postilion started the horses on their way to London. The spy saw Mrs. Bowmore looking at him, and pointed, with an
insolent nod of his head, first to the inside of the vehicle, and then over it to the high-road; signing to her that he
designed to accompany the person in the post-chaise to the end of the journey.

Turning to go back, Mrs. Bowmore saw her own bewilderment reflected in the faces of the two female servants, who had
followed her out.

“Who can the footman be after, ma’am?” asked the cook. “Do you think it’s a thief?”

The housemaid pointed to the post-chaise, barely visible in the distance.

Mrs. Bowmore, returning through the garden-gate, instantly stopped and looked at the woman.

“What makes you mention your master’s name, Amelia, when you fear that something is wrong?” she asked.

Amelia changed color, and looked confused.

“I am loth to alarm you, ma’am,” she said; “and I can’t rightly see what it is my duty to do.”

Mrs. Bowmore’s heart sank within her under the cruelest of all terrors, the terror of something unknown. “Don’t keep
me in suspense,” she said faintly. “Whatever it is, let me know it.”

She led the way back to the parlor. The housemaid followed her. The cook (declining to be left alone) followed the
housemaid.

“It was something I heard early this afternoon, ma’am,” Amelia began. “Cook happened to be busy — ”

The cook interposed: she had not forgiven the housemaid for calling her a simpleton. “No, Amelia, if you
must bring me into it — not busy. Uneasy in my mind on the subject of the soup.”

“I don’t know that your mind makes much difference,” Amelia resumed. “What it comes to is this — it was I, and not
you, who went into the kitchen-garden for the vegetables.”

“Not by my wish, Heaven knows!” persisted the cook.

“Leave the room!” said Mrs. Bowmore. Even her patience had given way at last.

The cook looked as if she declined to believe her own ears. Mrs. Bowmore pointed to the door. The cook said “Oh?” —
accenting it as a question. Mrs. Bowmore’s finger still pointed. The cook, in solemn silence, yielded to circumstances,
and banged the door.

“I was getting the vegetables, ma’am,” Amelia proceeded, “when I heard voices on the other side of the paling. The
wood is so old that one can see through the cracks easy enough. I saw my master, and Mr. Linwood, and Captain Bervie.
The Captain seemed to have stopped the other two on the pathway that leads to the field; he stood, as it might be,
between them and the back way to the house — and he spoke severely, that he did!”

“What did Captain Bervie say?”

“He said these words, ma’am: ‘For the last time, Mr. Bowmore,’ says he, ‘will you understand that you are in danger,
and that Mr. Linwood is in danger, unless you both leave this neighborhood to-night?’ My master made light of it. ‘For
the last time,’ says he, ‘will you refer us to a proof of what you say, and allow us to judge for ourselves?’ ‘I have
told you already,’ says the Captain, ‘I am bound by my duty toward another person to keep what I know a secret.’ ‘Very
well,’ says my master, ‘I am bound by my duty to my country. And I tell you this,’ says he, in his high and
mighty way, ‘neither Government, nor the spies of Government, dare touch a hair of my head: they know it, sir, for the
head of the people’s friend!’”

“That’s quite true,” said Mrs. Bowmore, still believing in her husband as firmly as ever.

Amelia went on:

“Captain Bervie didn’t seem to think so,” she said. “He lost his temper. ‘What stuff!’ says he; ‘there’s a
Government spy in your house at this moment, disguised as your footman.’ My master looked at Mr. Linwood, and burst out
laughing. ‘You won’t beat that, Captain,’ says he, ‘if you talk till doomsday.’ He turned about without a word more,
and went home. The Captain caught Mr. Linwood by the arm, as soon as they were alone. ‘For God’s sake,’ says he, ‘don’t
follow that madman’s example!’”

“He did, indeed, ma’am — and he was in earnest about it, too. ‘If you value your liberty,’ he says to Mr. Linwood;
‘if you hope to become Charlotte’s husband, consult your own safety. I can give you a passport. Escape to France and
wait till this trouble is over.’ Mr. Linwood was not in the best of tempers — Mr. Linwood shook him off. ‘Charlotte’s
father will soon be my father,’ says he, ‘do you think I will desert him? My friends at the Club have taken up my
claim; do you think I will forsake them at the meeting to-morrow? You ask me to be unworthy of Charlotte, and unworthy
of my friends — you insult me, if you say more.’ He whipped round on his heel, and followed my master.”

“And what did the Captain do?”

“Lifted up his hands, ma’am, to the heavens, and looked — I declare it turned my blood to see him. If there’s truth
in mortal man, it’s my firm belief — ”

What the housemaid’s belief was, remained unexpressed. Before she could get to her next word, a shriek of horror
from the hall announced that the cook’s powers of interruption were not exhausted yet.

Mistress and servant both hurried out in terror of they knew not what. There stood the cook, alone in the hall,
confronting the stand on which the overcoats and hats of the men of the family were placed.

“Where’s the master’s traveling coat?” cried the cook, staring wildly at an unoccupied peg. “And where’s his cap to
match! Oh Lord, he’s off in the post-chaise! and the footman’s after him!”

Simpleton as she was, the woman had blundered on a very serious discovery.

Coat and cap — both made after a foreign pattern, and both strikingly remarkable in form and color to English eyes —
had unquestionably disappeared. It was equally certain that they were well known to the foot man, whom the Captain had
declared to be a spy, as the coat and cap which his master used in traveling. Had Mr. Bowmore discovered (since the
afternoon) that he was really in danger? Had the necessities of instant flight only allowed him time enough to snatch
his coat and cap out of the hall? And had the treacherous manservant seen him as he was making his escape to the
post-chaise? The cook’s conclusions answered all these questions in the affirmative — and, if Captain Bervie’s words of
warning had been correctly reported, the cook’s conclusion for once was not to be despised.

Under this last trial of her fortitude, Mrs. Bowmore’s feeble reserves of endurance completely gave way. The poor
lady turned faint and giddy. Amelia placed her on a chair in the hall, and told the cook to open the front door, and
let in the fresh air.

The cook obeyed; and instantly broke out with a second terrific scream; announcing nothing less, this time, than the
appearance of Mr. Bowmore himself, alive and hearty, returning with Percy from the meeting at the Club!

The inevitable inquiries and explanations followed.

Fully assured, as he had declared himself to be, of the sanctity of his person (politically speaking), Mr. Bowmore
turned pale, nevertheless, when he looked at the unoccupied peg on his clothes stand. Had some man unknown personated
him? And had a post-chaise been hired to lead an impending pursuit of him in the wrong direction? What did it mean? Who
was the friend to whose services he was indebted? As for the proceedings of the man-servant, but one interpretation
could now be placed on them. They distinctly justified what Captain Bervie had said of him. Mr. Bowmore thought of the
Captain’s other assertion, relating to the urgent necessity for making his escape; and looked at Percy in silent
dismay; and turned paler than ever.

Percy’s thoughts, diverted for the moment only from the lady of his love, returned to her with renewed fidelity.
“Let us hear what Charlotte thinks of it,” he said. “Where is she?”

It was impossible to answer this question plainly and in few words.

Terrified at the effect which her attempt at explanation produced on Percy, helplessly ignorant when she was called
upon to account for her daughter’s absence, Mrs. Bowmore could only shed tears and express a devout trust in
Providence. Her husband looked at the new misfortune from a political point of view. He sat down and slapped his
forehead theatrically with the palm of his hand. “Thus far,” said the patriot, “my political assailants have only
struck at me through the newspapers. Now they strike at me through my child!”

Percy made no speeches. There was a look in his eyes which boded ill for Captain Bervie if the two met. “I am going
to fetch her,” was all he said, “as fast as a horse can carry me.”

He hired his horse at an inn in the town, and set forth for Justice Bervie’s house at a gallop.

During Percy’s absence, Mr. Bowmore secured the front and back entrances to the cottage with his own hands.

These first precautions taken, he ascended to his room and packed his traveling-bag. “Necessaries for my use in
prison,” he remarked. “The bloodhounds of Government are after me.” “Are they after Percy, too?” his wife ventured to
ask. Mr. Bowmore looked up impatiently, and cried “Pooh!” — as if Percy was of no consequence. Mrs. Bowmore thought
otherwise: the good woman privately packed a bag for Percy, in the sanctuary of her own room.

For an hour, and more than an hour, no event of any sort occurred.

Mr. Bowmore stalked up and down the parlor, meditating. At intervals, ideas of flight presented themselves
attractively to his mind. At intervals, ideas of the speech that he had prepared for the public meeting on the next day
took their place. “If I fly to-night,” he wisely observed, “what will become of my speech? I will not fly
to-night! The people shall hear me.”

He sat down and crossed his arms fiercely. As he looked at his wife to see what effect he had produced on her, the
sound of heavy carriage-wheels and the trampling of horses penetrated to the parlor from the garden-gate.

Mr. Bowmore started to his feet, with every appearance of having suddenly altered his mind on the question of
flight. Just as he reached the hall, Percy’s voice was heard at the front door. “Let me in. Instantly! Instantly!”

Mrs. Bowmore drew back the bolts before the servants could help her. “Where is Charlotte?” she cried; seeing Percy
alone on the doorstep.

“Gone!” Percy answered furiously. “Eloped to Paris with Captain Bervie! Read her own confession. They were just
sending the messenger with it, when I reached the house.”

He handed a note to Mrs. Bowmore, and turned aside to speak to her husband while she read it. Charlotte wrote to her
mother very briefly; promising to explain everything on her return. In the meantime, she had left home under careful
protection — she had a lady for her companion on the journey — and she would write again from Paris. So the letter,
evidently written in great haste, began and ended.

Percy took Mr. Bowmore to the window, and pointed to a carriage and four horses waiting at the garden-gate.

“Do you come with me, and back me with your authority as her father?” he asked, sternly. “Or do you leave me to go
alone?”

Mr. Bowmore was famous among his admirers for his “happy replies.” He made one now.

While the travelers’ bags were being placed in the chaise, Mr. Bowmore was struck by an idea.

He produced from his coat-pocket a roll of many papers thickly covered with writing. On the blank leaf in which they
were tied up, he wrote in the largest letters: “Frightful domestic calamity! Vice–President Bowmore obliged to leave
England! Welfare of a beloved daughter! His speech will be read at the meeting by Secretary Joskin, of the Club.
(Private to Joskin. Have these lines printed and posted everywhere. And, when you read my speech, for God’s sake don’t
drop your voice at the ends of the sentences.)”

He threw down the pen, and embraced Mrs. Bowmore in the most summary manner. The poor woman was ordered to send the
roll of paper to the Club, without a word to comfort and sustain her from her husband’s lips. Percy spoke to her
hopefully and kindly, as he kissed her cheek at parting.

On the next morning, a letter, addressed to Mrs. Bowmore, was delivered at the cottage by private messenger.

Opening the letter, she recognized the handwriting of her husband’s old friend, and her old friend — Major Mulvany.
In breathless amazement, she read these lines:

“DEAR MRS. BOWMORE— In matters of importance, the golden rule is never to waste words. I have performed one of the
great actions of my life — I have saved your husband.

“How I discovered that my friend was in danger, I must not tell you at present. Let it be enough if I say that I
have been a guest under Justice Bervie’s hospitable roof, and that I know of a Home Office spy who has taken you
unawares, under pretense of being your footman. If I had not circumvented him, the scoundrel would have imprisoned your
husband, and another dear friend of mine. This is how I did it.

“I must begin by appealing to your memory.

“Do you happen to remember that your husband and I are as near as may be of about the same height? Very good, so
far. Did you, in the next place, miss Bowmore’s traveling coat and cap from their customary peg? I am the thief,
dearest lady; I put them on my own humble self. Did you hear a sudden noise in the hall? Oh, forgive me — I made the
noise! And it did just what I wanted of it. It brought the spy up from the kitchen, suspecting that something might be
wrong.

“What did the wretch see when he got into the hall? His master, in traveling costume, running out. What did he find
when he reached the garden? His master escaping, in a post-chaise, on the road to London. What did he do, the born
blackguard that he was? Jumped up behind the chaise to make sure of his prisoner. It was dark when we got to London. In
a hop, skip, and jump, I was out of the carriage, and in at my own door, before he could look me in the face.

“The date of the warrant, you must know, obliged him to wait till the morning. All that night, he and the Bow Street
runners kept watch They came in with the sunrise — and who did they find? Major Mulvany snug in his bed, and as
innocent as the babe unborn. Oh, they did their duty! Searched the place from the kitchen to the garrets — and gave it
up. There’s but one thing I regret — I let the spy off without a good thrashing. No matter. I’ll do it yet, one of
these days.

“Let me know the first good news of our darling fugitives, and I shall be more than rewarded for what little I have
done.

“Your always devoted,

“TERENCE MULVANY.”

CHAPTER XI.

PURSUIT AND DISCOVERY.

FEELING himself hurried away on the road to Dover, as fast as four horses could carry him, Mr. Bowmore had leisure
to criticise Percy’s conduct, from his own purely selfish point of view.

“If you had listened to my advice,” he said, “you would have treated that man Bervie like the hypocrite and villain
that he is. But no! you trusted to your own crude impressions. Having given him your hand after the duel (I would have
given him the contents of my pistol!) you hesitated to withdraw it again, when that slanderer appealed to your
friendship not to cast him off. Now you see the consequence!”

“Wait till we get to Paris!” All the ingenuity of Percy’s traveling companion failed to extract from him any other
answer than that.

Foiled so far, Mr. Bowmore began to start difficulties next. Had they money enough for the journey? Percy touched
his pocket, and answered shortly, “Plenty.” Had they passports? Percy sullenly showed a letter. “There is the necessary
voucher from a magistrate,” he said. “The consul at Dover will give us our passports. Mind this!” he added, in warning
tones, “I have pledged my word of honor to Justice Bervie that we have no political object in view in traveling to
France. Keep your politics to yourself, on the other side of the Channel.”

Mr. Bowmore listened in blank amazement. Charlotte’s lover was appearing in a new character — the character of a man
who had lost his respect for Charlotte’s father!

It was useless to talk to him. He deliberately checked any further attempts at conversation by leaning back in the
carriage, and closing his eyes. The truth is, Mr. Bowmore’s own language and conduct were insensibly producing the
salutary impression on Percy’s mind which Bervie had vainly tried to convey, under the disadvantage of having
Charlotte’s influence against him. Throughout the journey, Percy did exactly what Bervie had once entreated him to do —
he kept Mr. Bowmore at a distance.

At every stage, they inquired after the fugitives. At every stage, they were answered by a more or less intelligible
description of Bervie and Charlotte, and of the lady who accompanied them. No disguise had been attempted; no person
had in any case been bribed to conceal the truth.

When the first tumult of his emotions had in some degree subsided, this strange circumstance associated itself in
Percy’s mind with the equally unaccountable conduct of Justice Bervie, on his arrival at the manor house.

The old gentleman met his visitor in the hall, without expressing, and apparently without feeling, any indignation
at his son’s conduct. It was even useless to appeal to him for information. He only said, “I am not in Arthur’s
confidence; he is of age, and my daughter (who has volunteered to accompany him) is of age. I have no claim to control
them. I believe they have taken Miss Bowmore to Paris; and that is all I know about it.”

He had shown the same dense insensibility in giving his official voucher for the passports. Percy had only to
satisfy him on the question of politics; and the document was drawn out as a matter of course. Such had been the
father’s behavior; and the conduct of the son now exhibited the same shameless composure. To what conclusion did this
discovery point? Percy abandoned the attempt to answer that question in despair.

They reached Dover toward two o’clock in the morning.

At the pier-head they found a coast-guardsman on duty, and received more information.

In 1817 the communication with France was still by sailing-vessels. Arriving long after the departure of the regular
packet, Bervie had hired a lugger, and had sailed with the two ladies for Calais, having a fresh breeze in his favor.
Percy’s first angry impulse was to follow him instantly. The next moment he remembered the insurmountable obstacle of
the passports. The Consul would certainly not grant those essentially necessary documents at two in the morning!

The only alternative was to wait for the regular packet, which sailed some hours later — between eight and nine
o’clock in the forenoon. In this case, they might apply for their passports before the regular office hours, if they
explained the circumstances, backed by the authority of the magistrate’s letter.

Mr. Bowmore followed Percy to the nearest inn that was open, sublimely indifferent to the delays and difficulties of
the journey. He ordered refreshments with the air of a man who was performing a melancholy duty to himself, in the name
of humanity.

“When I think of my speech,” he said, at supper, “my heart bleeds for the people. In a few hours more, they will
assemble in their thousands, eager to hear me. And what will they see? Joskin in my place! Joskin with a manuscript in
his hand! Joskin, who drops his voice at the ends of his sentences! I will never forgive Charlotte. Waiter, another
glass of brandy and water.”

After an unusually quick passage across the Channel, the travelers landed on the French coast, before the defeated
spy had returned from London to Dartford by stage-coach. Continuing their journey by post as far as Amiens, they
reached that city in time to take their places by the diligence to Paris.

Arrived in Paris, they encountered another incomprehensible proceeding on the part of Captain Bervie.

Among the persons assembled in the yard to see the arrival of the diligence was a man with a morsel of paper in his
hand, evidently on the lookout for some person whom he expected to discover among the travelers. After consulting his
bit of paper, he looked with steady attention at Percy and Mr. Bowmore, and suddenly approached them. “If you wish to
see the Captain,” he said, in broken English, “you will find him at that hotel.” He handed a printed card to Percy, and
disappeared among the crowd before it was possible to question him.

Even Mr. Bowmore gave way to human weakness, and condescended to feel astonished in the face of such an event as
this. “What next?” he exclaimed.

“Wait till we get to the hotel,” said Percy.

In half an hour more the landlord had received them, and the waiter had led them to the right door. Percy pushed the
man aside, and burst into the room.

Captain Bervie was alone, reading a newspaper. Before the first furious words had escaped Percy’s lips, Bervie
silenced him by pointing to a closed door on the right of the fireplace.

“She is in that room,” he said; “speak quietly, or you may frighten her. I know what you are going to say,” he
added, as Percy stepped nearer to him. “Will you hear me in my own defense, and then decide whether I am the greatest
scoundrel living, or the best friend you ever had?”

He put the question kindly, with something that was at once grave and tender in his look and manner. The
extraordinary composure with which he acted and spoke had its tranquilizing influence over Percy. He felt himself
surprised into giving Bervie a hearing.

“I will tell you first what I have done,” the Captain proceeded, “and next why I did it. I have taken it on myself,
Mr. Linwood, to make an alteration in your wedding arrangements. Instead of being married at Dartford church, you will
be married (if you see no objection) at the chapel of the embassy in Paris, by my old college friend the chaplain.”

This was too much for Percy’s self-control. “Your audacity is beyond belief,” he broke out.

“And beyond endurance,” Mr. Bowmore added. “Understand this, sir! Whatever your defense may be, I object, under any
circumstances, to be made the victim of a trick.”

“You are the victim of your own obstinate refusal to profit by a plain warning,” Bervie rejoined. “At the eleventh
hour, I entreated you, and I entreated Mr. Linwood, to provide for your own safety; and I spoke in vain.”

Percy’s patience gave way once more.

“To use your own language,” he said, “I have still to decide whether you have behaved toward me like a scoundrel or
a friend. You have said nothing to justify yourself yet.”

“Miss Bowmore’s reputation is not in question for a single instant,” Bervie answered. “My sister has been the
companion of her journey from first to last.”

“Journey?” Mr. Bowmore repeated, indignantly. “I want to know, sir, what the journey means. As an outraged father, I
ask one plain question. Why did you run away with my daughter?”

Bervie took a slip of paper from his pocket, and handed it to Percy with a smile.

It was a copy of the warrant which Justice Bervie’s duty had compelled him to issue for the “arrest of Orlando
Bowmore and Percy Linwood.” There was no danger in divulging the secret now. British warrants were waste-paper in
France, in those days.

“I ran away with the bride,” Bervie said coolly, “in the certain knowledge that you and Mr. Bowmore would run after
me. If I had not forced you both to follow me out of England on the first of April, you would have been made State
prisoners on the second. What do you say to my conduct now?”

“Wait, Percy, before you answer him,” Mr. Bowmore interposed. “He is ready enough at excusing himself. But, observe
— he hasn’t a word to say in justification of my daughter’s readiness to run away with him.”

“Have you quite done?” Bervie asked, as quietly as ever.

Mr. Bowmore reserved the right of all others which he most prized, the right of using his tongue. “For the present,”
he answered in his loftiest manner, “I have done.”

Bervie proceeded: “Your daughter consented to run away with me, because I took her to my father’s house, and
prevailed upon him to trust her with the secret of the coming arrests. She had no choice left but to let her obstinate
father and her misguided lover go to prison — or to take her place with my sister and me in the traveling-carriage.” He
appealed once more to Percy. “My friend, you remember the day when you spared my life. Have I remembered it, too?”

For once, there was an Englishman who was not contented to express the noblest emotions that humanity can feel by
the commonplace ceremony of shaking hands. Percy’s heart overflowed. In an outburst of unutterable gratitude he threw
himself on Bervie’s breast. As brothers the two men embraced. As brothers they loved and trusted one another, from that
day forth.

The door on the right was softly opened from within. A charming face — the dark eyes bright with happy tears, the
rosy lips just opening into a smile — peeped into the room. A low sweet voice, with an under-note of trembling in it,
made this modest protest, in the form of an inquiry:

“When you have quite done, Percy, with our good friend, perhaps you will have something to say to ME?”

LAST WORDS.

THE persons immediately interested in the marriage of Percy and Charlotte were the only persons present at the
ceremony.

At the little breakfast afterward, in the French hotel, Mr. Bowmore insisted on making a speech to a select audience
of six; namely, the bride and bridegroom, the bridesmaid, the Chaplain, the Captain, and Mrs. Bowmore. But what does a
small audience matter? The English frenzy for making speeches is not to be cooled by such a trifle as that. At the end
of the world, the expiring forces of Nature will hear a dreadful voice — the voice of the last Englishman delivering
the last speech.

Percy wisely made his honeymoon a long one; he determined to be quite sure of his superior influence over his wife
before he trusted her within reach of her father again.

Mr. and Mrs. Bowmore accompanied Captain Bervie and Miss Bervie on their way back to England, as far as Boulogne. In
that pleasant town the banished patriot set up his tent. It was a cheaper place to live in than Paris, and it was
conveniently close to England, when he had quite made up his mind whether to be an exile on the Continent, or to go
back to his own country and be a martyr in prison. In the end, the course of events settled that question for him. Mr.
Bowmore returned to England, with the return of the Habeas Corpus Act.

The years passed. Percy and Charlotte (judged from the romantic point of view) became two uninteresting married
people. Bervie (always remaining a bachelor) rose steadily in his profession, through the higher grades of military
rank. Mr. Bowmore, wisely overlooked by a new Government, sank back again into the obscurity from which shrewd
Ministers would never have assisted him to emerge. The one subject of interest left, among the persons of this little
drama, was now represented by Doctor Lagarde. Thus far, not a trace had been discovered of the French physician, who
had so strangely associated the visions of his magnetic sleep with the destinies of the two men who had consulted
him.

Steadfastly maintaining his own opinion of the prediction and the fulfillment, Bervie persisted in believing that he
and Lagarde (or Percy and Lagarde) were yet destined to meet, and resume the unfinished consultation at the point where
it had been broken off. Persons, happy in the possession of “sound common sense,” who declared the prediction to be
skilled guesswork, and the fulfillment manifest coincidence, ridiculed the idea of finding Doctor Lagarde as closely
akin to that other celebrated idea of finding the needle in the bottle of hay. But Bervie’s obstinacy was proverbial.
Nothing shook his confidence in his own convictions.

More than thirteen years had elapsed since the consultation at the Doctor’s lodgings, when Bervie went to Paris to
spend a summer holiday with his friend, the chaplain at the English embassy. His last words to Percy and Charlotte when
he took his leave were: “Suppose I meet with Doctor Lagarde?”

It was then the year 1830. Bervie arrived at his friend’s rooms on the 24th of July. On the 27th of the month the
famous revolution broke out which dethroned Charles the Tenth in three days.

On the second day, Bervie and his host ventured into the streets, watching the revolution (like other reckless
Englishmen) at the risk of their lives. In the confusion around them they were separated. Bervie, searching for his
companion, found his progress stopped by a barricade, which had been desperately attacked, and desperately defended.
Men in blouses and men in uniform lay dead and dying together: the tricolored flag waved over them, in token of the
victory of the people.

Bervie had just revived a poor wretch with a drink from an overthrown bowl of water, which still had a few drops
left in it, when he felt a hand laid on his shoulder from behind. He turned and discovered a National Guard, who had
been watching his charitable action. “Give a helping hand to that poor fellow,” said the citizen-soldier, pointing to a
workman standing near, grimed with blood and gunpowder. The tears were rolling down the man’s cheeks. “I can’t see my
way, sir, for crying,” he said. “Help me to carry that sad burden into the next street.” He pointed to a rude wooden
litter, on which lay a dead or wounded man, his face and breast covered with an old cloak. “There is the best friend
the people ever had,” the workman said. “He cured us, comforted us, respected us, loved us. And there he lies, shot
dead while he was binding up the wounds of friends and enemies alike!”

“Whoever he is, he has died nobly,” Bervie answered “May I look at him?”